THE BOOK OF JOEL Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT INTRODUCTION JOEL (meaning "one to whom Jehovah is God," that is, worshipper of Jehovah) seems to have belonged to Judah, as no reference occurs to Israel; whereas he speaks of Jerusalem, the temple, the priests, and the ceremonies, as if he were intimately familiar with them (compare Joe 1:14; 2:1, 15, 32; 3:1, 2, 6, 16, 17, 20, 21). His predictions were probably delivered in the early days of Joash 870-865 B.C.; for no reference is made in them to the Babylonian, Assyrian, or even the Syrian invasion; and the only enemies mentioned are the Philistines, Phœnicians, Edomites, and Egyptians (Joe 3:4, 19). Had he lived after Joash, he would doubtless have mentioned the Syrians among the enemies whom he enumerates since they took Jerusalem and carried off immense spoil to Damascus (2Ch 24:23, 24). No idolatry is mentioned; and the temple services, the priesthood, and other institutions of the theocracy, are represented as flourishing. This all answers to the state of things under the high priesthood of Jehoiada, through whom Joash had been placed on the throne and who lived in the early years of Joash (2Ki 11:17, 18; 12:2-16; 2Ch 24:4-14). He was the son of Pethuel. The first chapter describes the desolation caused by an inroad of locusts--one of the instruments of divine judgment mentioned by Moses (De 28:38, 39) and by Solomon (1Ki 8:37). The second chapter (Joe 2:1-11): the appearance of them, under images of a hostile army suggesting that the locusts were symbols and forerunners of a more terrible scourge, namely, foreign enemies who would consume all before them. (The absence of mention of personal injury to the inhabitants is not a just objection to the figurative interpretation; for the figure is consistent throughout in attributing to the locusts only injury to vegetation, thereby injuring indirectly man and beast). Joe 2:12-17: exhortation to repentance, the result of which will be: God will deliver His people, the former and latter rains shall return to fertilize their desolated lands, and these shall be the pledge of the spiritual outpouring of grace beginning with Judah, and thence extending to "all flesh." Joe 2:18-3:21: God's judgments on Judah's enemies, whereas Judah shall be established for ever. Joel's style is pre-eminently pure. It is characterized by smoothness and fluency in the rhythms, roundness in the sentences, and regularity in the parallelisms. With the strength of Micah it combines the tenderness of Jeremiah, the vividness of Nahum, and the sublimity of Isaiah. As a specimen of his style take the second chapter wherein the terrible aspect of the locusts, their rapidity, irresistible progress, noisy din, and instinct-taught power of marshalling their forces for their career of devastation, are painted with graphic reality. CHAPTER 1 Joe 1:1-20. THE DESOLATE ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY THROUGH THE PLAGUE OF LOCUSTS; THE PEOPLE ADMONISHED TO OFFER SOLEMN PRAYERS IN THE TEMPLE; FOR THIS CALAMITY IS THE EARNEST OF A STILL HEAVIER ONE.
1. Joel--meaning, "Jehovah is God."
2, 3. A spirited introduction calling attention.
3. Tell ye your children--in order that they may be admonished by the severity of the punishment to fear God (Ps 78:6-8; compare Ex 13:8; Jos 4:7). 4. This verse states the subject on which he afterwards expands. Four species or stages of locusts, rather than four different insects, are meant (compare Le 11:22). Literally, (1) the gnawing locust; (2) the swarming locust; (3) the licking locust; (4) the consuming locust; forming a climax to the most destructive kind. The last is often three inches long, and the two antennæ, each an inch long. The two hinder of its six feet are larger than the rest, adapting it for leaping. The first "kind" is that of the locust, having just emerged from the egg in spring, and without wings. The second is when at the end of spring, still in their first skin, the locusts put forth little ones without legs or wings. The third, when after their third casting of the old skin, they get small wings, which enable them to leap the better, but not to fly. Being unable to go away till their wings are matured, they devour all before them, grass, shrubs, and bark of trees: translated "rough caterpillars" (Jer 51:27). The fourth kind, the matured winged locusts (see on Na 3:16). In Joe 2:25 they are enumerated in the reverse order, where the restoration of the devastations caused by them is promised. The Hebrews make the first species refer to Assyria and Babylon; the second species, to Medo-Persia; the third, to Greco-Macedonia and Antiochus Epiphanes; the fourth, to the Romans. Though the primary reference be to literal locusts, the Holy Spirit doubtless had in view the successive empires which assailed Judea, each worse than its predecessor, Rome being the climax.
5. Awake--out of your ordinary state of drunken stupor, to realize the
cutting off from you of your favorite drink. Even the drunkards (from a
Hebrew root, "any strong drink") shall be forced to "howl," though
usually laughing in the midst of the greatest national calamities, so
palpably and universally shall the calamity affect all.
6. nation--applied to the locusts, rather than "people"
(Pr 30:25, 26),
to mark not only their numbers, but also their savage
hostility; and also to prepare the mind of the hearer for the
transition to the figurative locusts in the second chapter, namely, the
"nation" or Gentile foe coming against Judea (compare
Joe 2:2).
7. barked--BOCHART, with the
Septuagint and Syriac, translates, from an Arabic
root, "hath broken," namely, the topmost shoots, which locusts most
feed on. CALVIN supports English Version.
8. Lament--O "my land"
(Joe 1:6;
Isa 24:4).
9. The greatest sorrow to the mind of a religious Jew, and what ought
to impress the whole nation with a sense of God's displeasure, is the
cessation of the usual temple-worship.
10. field . . . land--differing in that "field" means
the open, unenclosed country; "land," the rich red soil (from a
root "to be red") fit for cultivation. Thus, "a man of the field," in
Hebrew, is a "hunter"; a "man of the ground" or "land," an
"agriculturist"
(Ge 25:27).
"Field" and "land" are here personified.
11. Be . . . ashamed--that is, Ye shall have the shame of
disappointment on account of the failure of "the wheat" and "barley . . .
harvest."
12. pomegranate--a tree straight in the stem growing twenty feet high;
the fruit is of the size of an orange, with blood-red colored pulp.
13. Gird yourselves--namely, with sackcloth; as in
Isa 32:11,
the ellipsis is supplied (compare
Jer 4:8).
14. Sanctify . . . a fast--Appoint a solemn fast.
15. day of the Lord-- (Joe 2:1, 11); that is, the day of His anger (Isa 13:9; Ob 15; Zep 1:7, 15). It will be a foretaste of the coming day of the Lord as Judge of all men, whence it receives the same name. Here the transition begins from the plague of locusts to the worse calamities (Joe 2:1-11) from invading armies about to come on Judea, of which the locusts were the prelude.
16. Compare
Joe 1:9,
and latter part of
Joe 1:12.
17. is rotten--"is dried up," "vanishes away," from an Arabic root
[MAURER]. "Seed," literally, "grains." The drought causes the seeds to
lose all their vitality and moisture.
18. cattle . . . perplexed--implying the restless gestures of the dumb
beasts in their inability to find food. There is a tacit contrast
between the sense of the brute creation and the insensibility of the
people.
19. to thee will I cry--Joel here interposes, As this people is
insensible to shame or fear and will not hear, I will leave them and
address myself directly to Thee (compare
Isa 15:5;
Jer 23:9).
20. beasts . . . cry . . . unto thee--that is, look up to heaven with heads lifted up, as if their only expectation was from God (Job 38:41; Ps 104:21; 145:15; 147:9; compare Ps 42:1). They tacitly reprove the deadness of the Jews for not even now invoking God. CHAPTER 2 Joe 2:1-32. THE COMING JUDGMENT A MOTIVE TO REPENTANCE. PROMISE OF BLESSINGS IN THE LAST DAYS. A more terrific judgment than that of the locusts is foretold, under imagery drawn from that of the calamity then engrossing the afflicted nation. He therefore exhorts to repentance, assuring the Jews of Jehovah's pity if they would repent. Promise of the Holy Spirit in the last days under Messiah, and the deliverance of all believers in Him. 1. Blow . . . trumpet--to sound an alarm of coming war (Nu 10:1-10; Ho 5:8; Am 3:6); the office of the priests. Joe 1:15 is an anticipation of the fuller prophecy in this chapter.
2. darkness . . . gloominess . . . clouds
. . . thick darkness--accumulation of synonyms, to
intensify the picture of calamity
(Isa 8:22).
Appropriate here, as the swarms of locusts intercepting the sunlight
suggested darkness as a fit image of the coming visitation.
3. before . . . behind--that is, on every side
(1Ch 19:10).
4. appearance . . . of horses--
(Re 9:7).
Not literal, but figurative locusts. The fifth trumpet, or first woe,
in the parallel passage
(Re 9:1-11),
cannot be literal: for in
Re 9:11
it is said, "they had a king over them, the angel of the
bottomless pit"--in the Hebrew, Abaddon ("destroyer"), but in
the Greek, Apollyon--and
(Re 9:7)
"on their heads were as it were crowns like gold, and their
faces were as the faces of men." Compare
Joe 2:11,
"the day of the Lord . . . great and very terrible"; implying
their ultimate reference to be connected with Messiah's second coming
in judgment. The locust's head is so like that of a horse that the
Italians call it cavalette. Compare
Job 39:20,
"the horse . . . as the grasshopper," or locust.
5. Like the noise of chariots--referring to the loud sound caused by
their wings in motion, or else the movement of their hind legs.
6. much pained--namely, with terror. The Arab proverb is, "More
terrible than the locusts."
7-9. Depicting the regular military order of their advance, "One locust not turning a nail's breadth out of his own place in the march" [JEROME]. Compare Pr 30:27, "The locusts have no king, yet go they forth all of them by bands."
8. Neither shall one thrust another--that is, press upon so as to
thrust his next neighbor out of his place, as usually occurs in a large
multitude.
9. run to and fro in the city--greedily seeking what they can devour.
10. earth . . . quake before them--that is, the inhabitants of the
earth quake with fear of them.
11. Lord . . . his army--So among Mohammedans, "Lord of the locusts"
is a title of God.
12. With such judgments impending over the Jews, Jehovah Himself urges
them to repentance.
13. Let there be the inward sorrow of heart, and not the mere outward
manifestation of it by "rending the garment"
(Jos 7:6).
14. leave . . . a meat offering and a drink offering--that is, give plentiful harvests, out of the first-fruits of which we may offer the meat and drink offering, now "cut off" through the famine (Joe 1:9, 13, 16). "Leave behind Him": as God in visiting His people now has left behind Him a curse, so He will, on returning to visit them, leave behind Him a blessing. 15. Blow the trumpet--to convene the people (Nu 10:3). Compare Joe 1:14. The nation was guilty, and therefore there must be a national humiliation. Compare Hezekiah's proceedings before Sennacherib's invasion (2Ch 30:1-27).
16. sanctify the congregation--namely, by expiatory rites and
purification with water [CALVIN],
(Ex 19:10, 22).
MAURER translates, "appoint a solemn assembly,"
which would be a tautological repetition of
Joe 2:15.
17. between the porch and . . . altar--the porch of
Solomon's temple on the east
(1Ki 6:3);
the altar of burnt offerings in the court of the priests, before the
porch
(2Ch 8:12;
compare
Eze 8:16;
Mt 23:35).
The suppliants thus were to stand with their backs to the altar on
which they had nothing to offer, their faces towards the place of the
Shekinah presence.
18. Then--when God sees His people penitent.
19. corn . . . wine . . . oil--rather, as Hebrew, "the corn . . . the wine . . . the oil," namely, which the locusts have destroyed [HENDERSON]. MAURER not so well explains, "the corn, &c., necessary for your sustenance." "The Lord will answer," namely, the prayers of His people, priests, and prophets. Compare in the case of Sennacherib, 2Ki 19:20, 21.
20. the northern army--The Hebrew expresses that the north in relation to Palestine is not merely the quarter whence the invader
comes, but is his native land, "the Northlander"; namely, the Assyrian
or Babylonian (compare
Jer 1:14, 15;
Zep 2:13).
The locust's native country is not the north, but the
south, the deserts of Arabia, Egypt, and Libya. Assyria and
Babylon are the type and forerunner of all Israel's foes (Rome, and the
final Antichrist), from whom God will at last deliver His people, as He
did from Sennacherib
(2Ki 19:35).
21-23. In an ascending gradation, the land destroyed by
the enemy, the beasts of the field, and the children of
Zion, the land's inhabitants, are addressed, the former two by
personification.
22. (Zec 8:12). As before (Joe 1:18, 20) he represented the beasts as groaning and crying for want of food in the "pastures," so now he reassures them by the promise of springing pastures.
23. rejoice in the Lord--not merely in the springing pastures, as the brute "beasts" which cannot raise their thoughts higher
(Isa 61:10;
Hab 3:18).
24. The effect of the seasonable rains shall be abundance of all articles of food. 25. locust . . . cankerworm . . . caterpiller . . . palmer worm--the reverse order from Joe 1:4, where (see on Joe 1:4) God will restore not only what has been lost by the full-grown consuming locust, but also what has been lost by the less destructive licking locust, and swarming locust, and gnawing locust. 26. never be ashamed--shall no longer endure the "reproach of the heathen (Joe 2:17), [MAURER]; or rather, "shall not bear the shame of disappointed hopes," as the husbandmen had heretofore (Joe 1:11). So spiritually, waiting on God, His people shall not have the shame of disappointment in their expectations from Him (Ro 9:33).
27. know that I am in the midst of Israel--As in the Old Testament
dispensation God was present by the Shekinah, so in the New Testament
first, for a brief time by the Word made flesh dwelling among us
(Joh 1:14),
and to the close of this dispensation by the Holy Spirit in the Church
(Mt 28:20),
and probably in a more perceptible manner with Israel when restored
(Eze 37:26-28).
28. afterward--"in the last days"
(Isa 2:2)
under Messiah after the invasion and deliverance of Israel from
the northern army. Having heretofore stated the outward
blessings, he now raises their minds to the expectation of
extraordinary spiritual blessings, which constitute the true
restoration of God's people
(Isa 44:3).
Fulfilled in earnest
(Ac 2:17)
on Pentecost; among the Jews and the subsequent election of a people
among the Gentiles; hereafter more fully at the restoration of Israel
(Isa 54:13;
Jer 31:9, 34;
Eze 39:29;
Zec 12:10)
and the consequent conversion of the whole world
(Isa 2:2; 11:9; 66:18-23;
Mic 5:7;
Ro 11:12, 15).
As the Jews have been the seedmen of the elect Church gathered out of
Jews and Gentiles, the first Gospel preachers being Jews from
Jerusalem, so they shall be the harvest men of the coming world-wide
Church, to be set up at Messiah's appearing. That the promise is not
restricted to the first Pentecost appears from Peter's own
words: "The promise is (not only) unto you and to your children, (but
also) to all that are afar off (both in space and in time), even
as many as the Lord our God shall call"
(Ac 2:39).
So here "upon all flesh."
29. And also--"And even." The very slaves by becoming the Lord's servants are His freemen (1Co 7:22; Ga 3:28; Col 3:11; Phm 16). Therefore, in Ac 2:18 it is quoted, "My servants" and "My handmaidens"; as it is only by becoming the Lord's servants they are spiritually free, and partake of the same spirit as the other members of the Church. 30, 31. As Messiah's manifestation is full of joy to believers, so it has an aspect of wrath to unbelievers, which is represented here. Thus when the Jews received Him not in His coming of grace, He came in judgment on Jerusalem. Physical prodigies, massacres, and conflagrations preceded its destruction [JOSEPHUS, Wars of the Jews]. To these the language here may allude; but the figures chiefly symbolize political revolutions and changes in the ruling powers of the world, prognosticated by previous disasters (Am 8:9; Mt 24:29; Lu 21:25-27), and convulsions such as preceded the overthrow of the Jewish polity. Such shall probably occur in a more appalling degree before the final destruction of the ungodly world ("the great and terrible day of Jehovah," compare Mal 4:5), of which Jerusalem's overthrow is the type and earnest.
32. call on . . . name of . . .
Lord--Hebrew, JEHOVAH. Applied to Jesus
in
Ro 10:13
(compare
Ac 9:14;
1Co 1:2).
Therefore, Jesus is JEHOVAH; and the phrase means,
"Call on Messiah in His divine attributes."
CHAPTER 3 Joe 3:1-21. GOD'S VENGEANCE ON ISRAEL'S FOES IN THE VALLEY OF JEHOSHAPHAT. HIS BLESSING ON THE CHURCH. 1. bring again the captivity--that is, reverse it. The Jews restrict this to the return from Babylon. Christians refer it to the coming of Christ. But the prophet comprises the whole redemption, beginning from the return out of Babylon, then continued from the first advent of Christ down to the last day (His second advent), when God will restore His Church to perfect felicity [CALVIN].
2. Parallel to
Zec 14:2, 3, 4,
where the "Mount of Olives" answers to the "Valley of Jehoshaphat"
here. The latter is called "the valley of blessing" (Berachah)
(2Ch 20:26).
It lies between Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives and has the Kedron
flowing through it. As Jehoshaphat overthrew the confederate foes of
Judah, namely, Ammon, Moab, &c.
(Ps 83:6-8),
in this valley, so God was to overthrow the Tyrians, Zidonians,
Philistines, Edom, and Egypt, with a similar utter overthrow
(Joe 3:4, 19).
This has been long ago fulfilled; but the ultimate event shadowed forth
herein is still future, when God shall specially interpose to destroy
Jerusalem's last foes, of whom Tyre, Zidon, Edom, Egypt, and Philistia
are the types. As "Jehoshaphat" means "the judgment of Jehovah," the
valley of Jehoshaphat may be used as a general term for the
theater of God's final judgments on Israel's foes, with an allusion to
the judgment inflicted on them by Jehoshaphat. The definite mention of
the Mount of Olives in
Zec 14:4,
and the fact that this was the scene of the ascension, makes it likely
the same shall be the scene of Christ's coming again: compare "this
same Jesus . . . shall so come in like manner as ye
have seen Him go into heaven"
(Ac 1:11).
3. cast lots for my people--that is, divided among themselves My
people as their captives by lot. Compare as to the distribution of
captives by lot
(Ob 11;
Na 3:10).
4. what have ye to do with me--Ye have no connection with Me (that
is, with My people: God identifying Himself with Israel); I
(that is, My people) have given you no cause of quarrel, why then do ye trouble Me
(that is, My people)?
(Compare the same phrase,
Jos 22:24;
Jud 11:12;
2Sa 16:10;
Mt 8:29).
5. my silver . . . my gold--that is, the gold and silver of My people. The Philistines and Arabians had carried off all the treasures of King Jehoram's house (2Ch 21:16, 17). Compare also 1Ki 15:18; 2Ki 12:18; 14:14, for the spoiling of the treasures of the temple and the king's palace in Judah by Syria. It was customary among the heathen to hang up in the idol temples some of the spoils of war as presents to their gods.
6. Grecians--literally, "Javanites," that is, the Ionians, a Greek
colony on the coast of Asia Minor who were the first Greeks known to the
Jews. The Greeks themselves, however, in their original descent came
from Javan
(Ge 10:2, 4).
Probably the germ of Greek civilization in part came through the Jewish
slaves imported into Greece from Phœnicia by traffickers.
Eze 27:13
mentions Javan and Tyre as trading in the persons of men.
7. raise them--that is, I will rouse them. Neither sea nor distance will prevent My bringing them back. Alexander, and his successors, restored to liberty many Jews in bondage in Greece [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 13.5; Wars of the Jews, 3.9,2]. 8. sell them to . . . Sabeans--The Persian Artaxerxes Mnemon and Darius Ochus, and chiefly the Greek Alexander, reduced the Phœnician and Philistine powers. Thirty thousand Tyrians after the capture of Tyre by the last conqueror, and multitudes of Philistines on the taking of Gaza, were sold as slaves. The Jews are here said to do that which the God of Judah does in vindication of their wrong, namely, sell the Phœnicians who sold them, to a people "far off," as was Greece, whither the Jews had been sold. The Sabeans at the most remote extremity of Arabia Felix are referred to (compare Jer 6:20; Mt 12:42).
9. The nations hostile to Israel are summoned by Jehovah to "come up"
(this phrase is used because Jerusalem was on a hill) against
Jerusalem, not that they may destroy it, but to be destroyed by the Lord
(Eze 38:7-23;
Zec 12:2-9; 14:2, 3).
10. Beat your ploughshares into swords--As the foes are desired to
"beat their ploughshares into swords, and
their pruning hooks into spears," that so they may perish in their
unhallowed attack on Judah and Jerusalem, so these latter, and the
nations converted to God by them, after the overthrow of the
antichristian confederacy, shall, on the contrary, "beat their
swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks,"
when under Messiah's coming reign there shall be war no more
(Isa 2:4;
Ho 2:18;
Mic 4:3).
11. Assemble--"Hasten" [MAURER].
12. See
Joe 3:2.
13. Direction to the ministers of vengeance to execute God's wrath, as the enemy's wickedness is come to its full maturity. God does not cut off the wicked at once, but waits till their guilt is at its full (so as to the Amorites' iniquity, Ge 15:16), to show forth His own long-suffering, and the justice of their doom who have so long abused it (Mt 13:27-30, 38, 40; Re 14:15-19). For the image of a harvest to be threshed, compare Jer 51:33; and a wine-press, Isa 63:3 and La 1:15.
14. The prophet in vision seeing the immense array of nations
congregating, exclaims, "Multitudes, multitudes!" a Hebraism for
immense multitudes.
15. (See on Joe 2:10; Joe 2:30).
16. (Compare
Eze 38:18-22).
The victories of the Jews over their cruel foe Antiochus, under the
Maccabees, may be a reference of this prophecy; but the ultimate
reference is to the last Antichrist, of whom Antiochus was the type.
Jerusalem being the central seat of the theocracy
(Ps 132:13),
it is from thence that Jehovah discomfits the foe.
17. shall ye know--experimentally by the proofs of favors which I shall
vouchsafe to you. So "know"
(Isa 60:16;
Ho 2:20).
18. mountains . . . drop . . . wine--figurative for
abundance of vines, which were cultivated in terraces of earth between
the rocks on the sides of the hills of Palestine
(Am 9:13).
19. Edom--It was subjugated by David, but revolted under Jehoram (2Ch 21:8-10); and at every subsequent opportunity tried to injure Judah. Egypt under Shishak spoiled Jerusalem under Rehoboam of the treasures of the temple and the king's house; subsequently to the captivity, it inflicted under the Ptolemies various injuries on Judea. Antiochus spoiled Egypt (Da 11:40-43). Edom was made "desolate" under the Maccabees [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 12.11,12]. The low condition of the two countries for centuries proves the truth of the prediction (compare Isa 19:1, &c.; Jer 49:17; Ob 10). So shall fare all the foes of Israel, typified by these two (Isa 63:1, &c.). 20. dwell for ever-- (Am 9:15), that is, be established as a flourishing state. 21. cleanse . . . blood . . . not cleansed--I will purge away from Judah the extreme guilt (represented by "blood," the shedding of which was the climax of her sin, Isa 1:15) which was for long not purged away, but visited with judgments (Isa 4:4). Messiah saves from guilt, in order to save from punishment (Mt 1:21).
|
Copyright ? 2008 [www.seeking4truth.com]. All rights reserved .Revised: 05/17/2009 |